Hillary Clinton’s campaign has a made a “six-figure” television ad buy in Colorado in the final week of her presidential campaign, the Denver Post reports, after staying off the air for most of the summer and fall.

Campaign representatives told the Post there will be two ads, both of which attack the temperament of Donald Trump, and they will air in the Denver, Colorado Springs and Grand Junction markets. They put the size of the ad buy at “six figures.”

Independent journalist Sandra Fish went through the filings Tuesday morning and found $506,000 in spending on 456 slots on three stations.

The ad buy comes as polls show a tightening race even as Democrats continue to hold a steady lead in early voting.

Clinton’s Colorado director Emmy Ruiz said the decision to go back on the air doesn’t reflect concern about holding the state for Clinton but is intended to help congressional candidates.

“We have a robust lead in ballots returned, but Colorado Democrats have competitive races to win across the state. And Hillary Clinton is committed to electing progressives up and down the ballot to make a real difference for families in Colorado,” Ruiz told the Post.

The Trump campaign, of course, saw the move differently.

“It is obvious that the Clinton campaign is running scared. The good people of Colorado like what they see and hear from Donald Trump and reject the 30 years of failed policies and constant scandals Hillary Clinton has given them. America will be great again when Donald Trump is president,” Patrick Davis, a Trump senior adviser, told the Post.

Trump was in Lakewood and Greeley over the weekend, and his running mate Indiana Gov. Mike Pence will be in Loveland on Wednesday.

Chelsea Clinton, Hillary Clinton’s daughter, is in Aurora Tuesday and Boulder Wednesday making the case for her mother.

Author: Erica Meltzer

Erica Meltzer covers government and politics. She's worked for newspapers in Colorado, Arizona and Illinois and once won a First Amendment Award by showing up in the wrong place at the wrong time. She served in the Peace Corps in Paraguay and can swear fluently in Guarani. She gets emotional about public libraries. Contact Erica Meltzer at 303-502-2802, emeltzer@denverite.com or @meltzere. View all posts by Erica Meltzer